PAGE FOUR. THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1919. THECAPITALJDURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published every evening except Sun day by The Capital Journal Printing Co., 138 South Commercial street, Salem, Oregon. FISH HOGS. O. PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher Telephones Circulation and Busi ness Office, 81; Editorial rooms, 82. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE Entered as second "class mall matter t Salem, Oregon. , Nationnl Advertising Representa tives w. D. Ward, Tribune BuiMlng, New York; W. H. Stockwell, People's Gas Building, Chicago. SUBSCRIPTION KATES By carrier 60 cents a month, t6 ft jrear. , By mall, 60 cents a month. $1.25 tor three months, $2.25 for six months, M per year. By order of U. S. government, nil mail subscriptions are payable in ad-jrance. Rippling Rhymes. THE WOULD MOVES Nowadays ve see the tractor doing duty, like a charm; it's the most im portant factor in the business of the farm. Oh, we see the farmer sitting on a spring seat painted green, and-a wondrous gait he's hitting, as he tools his weird machine. Horses look to him like fakers, and for mules he'd give no mon; for he plows a dozen acres where a team would fall at one. As I view the mighty tractor oldon j times return to me, when I was a tragic actor in the scenes of husbandry. One old mule was my allotment, one old mule of brlndle gray, utid she knew just what n swat meunt, for I larruped her all day. All the. deary day I whacked her, soaked her ribs, and then again, and I longed to have a tractor, which was not Invented then. With a club her ribs I polished, hoping thus nome speed to gain; but all schedules Were abolished by that mule, and clods were vain. All my better years were nauandered In thlH slow and futile way; ... tip and down the field I wandered, slow as goose grease, through the day. Ana the mule nt last I sacked her, and took up a fountain pen. sore because the useful tractor had not ben ln- . vented then. Odds and Ends i New York. The vllllrm dashed oh the balcony. The revellers in the west ern dance hall registered tear then the b.Uoony collapsod and thirty movie actors were spilled over the property ha r downstairs. Los Angeles. "The works of Joseph Flavlus, comprising the nntl'iultles of the Jews" whs the book in heaviest de mand here during October, the public library report shows. Kenesaw Mountain Landls, federal Judge in Chicago, has a wealth of poise, lie sits through long stretches of litigation, apparently lost in some maze of abstraction on the other side of the moon, hut he never misses what is going on. And suddenly he will break in when attorneys are wrangling, or a witness isn't speaking well, and with n Judicious nitration or some per tinent advice, will readjust the court mechanism nnd set II running smooth ly again. One hot day the federnl prosecutor was examining a witness iu Judge Laudls' court, and wasn't making much progress. The witness was an Itinerant printer.. "Where were you working jn Janu ary of that year?" asked the prose-en-tor. -'"On the Texrirkana Fugue," replied the witness. "How long did you stay." "Two months." "The editor nnd I disagreed on n (Trent national question." "Where did you work next?" "On the Joplln News-Tleritld. I was there seven eelts." "Why did you leave?" "The editor and I dlsngroe.4 On a STi-eat national question." Three other Jobs were mentioned, and each time the printer explained his leaving with the same phrase. Then Judge Landis sat up in his chair and raised a hand, "Wait a minute," he commanded. "What was this great national ques tion?" "Prohibition," said the witness. Cartoons Magazine. IF THE salmon does not become extinct within a few years and a valuable industry destroyed, it will be no fault of the fishermen who are doing their best to exter minate the source of their livelihood. To protect the salmon and permit propagation, closed and federal jurisdiction. Laws to check this abuse by forbidding the sale of salmon thus caught during closed reason are now being contested in the federal supremt court. The rapacity of fishermen knows no bounds. There is probably no more short-sighted class. If there is a sufficient supply of salmon in the. stream to operate a cannery ,the canneries multiply and. the fishermen in crease until over-fishing depletes the stream and destroys the industry. Efforts for limitation and regulation are hooted down as in the interest of monopoly. As long as there is a salmon in the stream or in the sea 'tomorrow takes care of itself. It is not only the commercial fisherman that are rapacious, but alleged "sportsmen" as well, who like to print pictures proving themselves fish hogs.. The last legislature passed a law establishing a closed season for game fish over 10 inches in length during the spawning winter and spring months and the "sports men are now Hooding the lish and game commission with petitions to nullify even this partial protection to gratify their swinish propensities. A good case in point comes in a petition from Ashland "sportsmen" to re-open the Rogue to winter fishing for spawning steelheads. These anglers keep a lobby at the legislature during sessions to make war upon the salmon canneries at the mouth of the Roeue. which are for-hidden to take steelheads, but are unwilling themselves to give. uie uoui a cnance 10 propogate even though their own annual slaughter of steelheads on the spawniing beds, and not cannery operators, are the main cause of the diminish ing supply of trout. you incorrigible bachelor," said John.' "I got the Dunham account this morn ing." "Good! More power to you," an swered his friend," magnanimously. Meantime I could not throw off the feeling of being "out' of it. I won dered if all the days of my married life were going to be as long as this one seasons were established, and after years of litigation by Td'UT. tne very interests the laws were promulgated to protect, people living longer than single ones, their validity established Then the fisherman resorted JSCi. u'SJSS: to tismng at sea beyond the three mile limit, outside state i he anything but tragic. ny, jonn, you were only married yesterday!" Alice exclaimed. "Well, you see what luck Kate brought me, don't you?" And John gave me one of those rare smiles that started in his eyes and slowly reached his mouth. Such was its fascination for me that all that tableful of beautiful women were as naught. John had told them sincerejy that I had brought him luck jind my heart sang with Joy. It Wjs as though he had said: "Yes, here sfie is. I have selected her from the entire world of women that I have known. She may not meet jour approbation but her appeal to me is supreme." I felt myself glowing under his wholesouled praise. "Do you know that you look as though you had been using your puff and rogue stick?" whispered Karl Shepard to me audaciously. I answered: "Happiness is the great est cosmetic a woman knows." "Then she is a fool not to snatch happiness when It comes her way, isn't she?" was his somewhat cryptic ques tion. ' "I did," I answered with the desire to ignore any flirtatious interpretation that I might put upon his question. "Do you know," he said, in a low voice, "I admire you more than any woman I have ever seen." I looked my surprise, and he con tinued: "I think you carried off that horribly awkward position in which Jack put you with the greatest brav ery and aplomb I've ever seen. You knew as well as I did, that you were being weighed in the balance ' "And found wanting!" I interrupted. "Well I have had a rather trying day. It has included a hot, tiresome railroad Journey, meeting of John's mother, and then being brought here unexpectedly to meet his friends in all their festive array while I am attired almost shab bily as you can see. It is a rather im possible position. Don't you think so?" "John should not have put you in that position, : but he always was thoughtless. However, he is true blue Just the same," Karl said loyally, (Continued tomorrow.) NULLIFYING THE TREATY. THE.; reservations adopted by the senate, will in the ftllininn nf fVio nvnc-irlnnt- i-,,1li;f.r i.i 1 there is little likelihood of a two-thirds vote for its ratifi cation as amended. Should it be ratified, the president will undoubtedly withdraw it, and thus accomplish its re jection. , , . ,Wlth the foimre to ratify there will probably besome kind of a compromise in which reservations acceptable to the president be retained and the others dropped. In this form, the treaty will either be ratified or become an issue in the next national election. The treaty of. Versailles, including the covenant of the league of nations, has now been ratified by Great Britain, France, Italy, Japan and Germany. The United States, the real author of the treaty, alone among the great powers, has failed to act, thanks to the cheap pol itics of a partisan senate which has dealt in the smallest possible way with the biggest issue ever before it. Despite the approval of the treaty by other nations, and the demobilization of their armies, a state of war still exists and it is impossible to organize peace because of the failure of the United States, the great peace nation of the world, to act, and there is still question whether this gov ernment will fulfill the moral obligations to humanity in curred by the war, or leave the world to shift for itself as it pursues a selfish policy of aggrandizement and iso lation. ; The unrest prevailing in this country and elsewhere is due largely to the uncertainty resultant from failure to make peace an actuality as speedily as possible. The fail- uiv ul luc sfiiaie iu luncuon, is seen not only in the re fusal to ratify the treaty, but in the failure to pass a single reconstruction measure. As the New York World re- iiiaiKs: Not n finger has been lifted by the legislative branch of the government month V 7 . 1 ro,,U"n; bV wr. Congress was In session a mouth before the treaty of pence was signed nt Versailles; it has been in V , , " ,H marking time while Henry Cnbot Lodge and is sena orlnl associates exploit their vanity and vlndlctiveness by trying to WORK UPON MINERS WAGE SCALE COMMENCED By Ilulph F. Couch- (United Press staff correspondept) Washington, Nov. 17. Actual work of drawing up a new miners' wage scale for the central competitive field, the greatest soft coal district of the country, started here today. Committees representing employers and workers met to draft a schedule. Later, representatives of other mine districts were to agree on a wage scale, basefl on .the rates arranged for the central field. Miners Conciliatory The miners have not yet entirely receded from their. demands for a five day week and a six hour day, but they showed a disposition to be con ciliatory and indications today were that an agreement, even though tem porary, would be reached. - . ,. Meanwhile, reports were being re ceived of miners returning to work in increasing numbers, although in many places hundreds were refusing to re turn to work. Troops were being with drawn from the Coal fields, all fear of riots having disappeared. MAN ARRESTID FOR DISTURBANCE WILL FACE DRAFT CHARGE Protesting that he is a direct di ciple of Jesus Christ; that he's Mc Adoo, and that he was sent to France to kill the kiflser, L. E. Nelson, 29, is being held in the county Jail await ing the arrival of federal authorities who will take him to Portland to ans wer to a charge of violating the es pionage act. Nelson was arrested Sunday morning and was examined for his sanity this morning by Dr. W. H. Byrd, and declared mentally sound Sheriff Needham and Deputy Smith called to Turner at 1 a. m. Sunday morning, found Nelson creating a dis turbance in the Baker hotel. Hearing that officers were coming, he eseap ed through the back entrance and made a getaway in the dark. He returned later in the morning to the hotel and was arrested. It was found that he failed to regis ter for the war. Federal authorities in Portland were notified by Sheriff Needham this morning, and will prob ably come for Nelson this evening. j ! j State House Briefs. j :. j Japanese Prohibition Bill Framed To Conserve Rice Tokio, Oct. 28. (By mail) Secrer tary Tago of the home office is engag ed in drafting a ,drastic prohibition bill which will be laid before the forth coming session of the diet. The bill would prohibit the drinking of liquor by men and women under 26 years of age. This is the first time the govern ment has looked with favor on a tem perance measure, although similar bills have been introduced from year to year by Nemoto, a member of the diet, and an ardent Christian. The need of conserving rice has caused the peers to favor the limiting of the drinking of sake. The bill will probably make an exception in the case of the time honored custom of drinking sake at wedding ceremonies. 'Americanism" that they have im- m-iiiy in me mime of a snurlmiN evokid to cover their partisan onorii ti,,u is a record of which no American of the next generation will '"or be It is a record that no. com Detent American hoslorinn will ever de- Tt proa 1. fend, LOVE and MARRIED ilFE wtj, viicr noxea mitnor J Idah MSGlone Gibson JOHN'S FKIEXOS Th' modern country relative don't think no more o" givltt' away a punkln than lu does his right arm. S:cakhi' o hiTlctuiw-flfty-ceiU suxpende-.s are now oho dollar. I suppose I should have been big enough to have risen above the feel ing that, because I was not di-essed suitably and was travel stained and worn. I was out of place in this imj' l-urty. Instead of being able to make my. first appearance among John's friends after a visit to the beauty par lor and the selection of my prettiest frock, I was painfully aware of the fact that I never looked worse In all my life. After the first gay inquiries mid an swers were over. I lapsed into silence with the painful consciousness that J was being Judged not only plain. Ill dressed, awkward, hut stupid as well. John had mn.de -ft place for himself beside KlianUoth Morelnnd with the words, "liy Jove, liess, you are the best looking girl T have seen in month of Sundays" Of course he didn't realise just ex actly whnt these words told and neith er did he think she was the best look ing girl he had seen in a month of Sun days. He Just was trying to tell her that rhe was looking well in her ex quisite, If somewhat bizarre, peacock blue, spangled gown and her wonder- lot emeralds nnd sapphires which shone iu her ears, nbout hot- neck, on SALEM BOY SCOUTS TO HAVE PAPER DRIVE Every good and loyal patriot in the city of Salem is asked to share their blessings with the boy scouts of Am erica in the troops under the Salem council, this week and next, by help ing collect old newspapers and maga zines which will be collected and dis posed of by the Salem scouts. This drive is an attempt by the scofits of local troops to replenish their troop treasuries, and so aid in the securing of troop equipment for use in further ing the program of scouting. All re turns from this drive will be turned over to the Salem troops directly, be ing divided among the troops accord ing to the amount of paper collected by each troop, and will be expended under the direction of the scoutmas ter and scout .executive for the bene fit of the individual troops. The drive will be put on in sections, both in time and districts, In order that the scouts may more thoroughly cover the entire city in quest of desir able paper. One half of the city will be canvassed next Saturday and the remainder on the following Saturday, the drive to terminate on November 29th, the Saturday following Thanks giving. It is expected that at least a good carload of newspapers and mag azines will be available for scouts by that time. Every good housewife, merchant or concern within the call of the' boy scouts of Salem should save every old paper and magazine and be willing' to help Salem troops with their kind co operation when the days of collection dawn. Every one is asked to closely watch for announcements concerning the disposal of the paper, and any one inconvenienced by such a method should call Scout Master Cook at 772v whereon the paper will be collected Immediately. Sure Relief B fi Rexi.Aue Hot water Sure Relief E LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION What Your Kidneys i r-Should Do For You The kidneys are really filters, finely organized tor their work of cleans ing and purifying the blood, select ing and. throwing out waste products which would act as poisons if per mitted to remain in the system. When your kidneys are out of order, the impurities are not removed and remain to poison the system, caus ing backache, swollen or stiff joints, rheumatic pains, phffinesB under the eyes, floating specks, biliousness, weakness and pale, waxy, dry skin. WAS MISERABLE AND ALL TIRED OUT " I suffered with kidney trouble and have takn many kinds of medicine without getting relief. I used to have severe pains across my back and fett rr.iseraMe and all tired out, buttfter taking Foley Kidney Fills I am well. In fact 1 have not been bothered wiih kidney trouble since taking the piHa." Mrs. C- J. Ellis. 505 8th Ave., Sioux Falla, S. Foley Kidney Pills are made from the purest and finest medicines, accepted as the most help ful for kidney trouble and bladder ail ments. They cost far more to matte than the average kidney pills, forth high standard of their making m never deviated from, no matter how the cost of ingredients advance. SOLD BY - J. C. Perry, 23-Year-0!d Girl Bandit And Sweetheart Arrested Oakland, Cal., Nov. 17. Irene John son, 23-year-old girl bandit, and her sweeheart, Bert Garrett, both wanted on various charges in Sacramento, Richmond and Alameda, are under ar rest here. She has admitted that she is the young woman who single handed bound, gagged and robbed A'irgil Reed, Richmond photographer, of $.135 in his studio Saturday night. "I wanted to show Bert I was not yellow," she said. "It was my first Job and after I pulled it l)e patted my back and said 'Irene, you're a won der.' " She came here from Oregon. she said. - . Application for increase in tele phone rates were filed with the public servce" commission this morning by the Interurban Telephone company of Silverton and the Independence Telephone company. Both allege ma terial increase in costs of operation. Embargos on the shipment of grain to Puget Sound and Columbia river ports which have been in effect for several weeks past are now suspend ed, according to notification receiv ed by the public service commission this morning from H. B. Aiahton, re gional dlrecto iVith the TJ. S. railroad -administration. No permits for tho shipment of grain to these ports will be required until further order, th notice states. No coal was confiscated by the rail roads Of the northwest during the re cent coal strike, according to a letter received this morning by the public service commission from the federal railroad administration which declar es that the only action taken by the roads effecting coal in transit was to hold it on the tracks for distribution where most seriously needed. In c-.se of an I. V. TV. uprising In Oregon similar to that which occurred at Ontrnlia. Adjutant General Stafrin of the O. N. G. savs he would be aula to rec.-.jlt between 1 500 and 16000 m-n for immediate dutv. Non-Support Charge Is Dismissed By Unruh Today Consenting to a compromise between the belligerents, Justice of the Peast Glen Uhruh today dismissed the nbn support charge against Clarence Blan chard, preferred by the state. Blanchard was divorced from his wife some time ago and ordered to pay $25 a month alimony. He kept up the payment until last March. It is said, then stopped. The charge of non-support was then brought. . Md OR MRS. DYSPEPTIC Get rid of Indigestion and Stomach Worries with "Pape's Diapepsin" e.,ai,.a.ianeMe.ea e.we..Me..an.,iiii,enaia.,e "Really does" put weak, disordered stomachs in order "really does" over come . indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness due to acid fermentation that just that makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach antacid and regulator in tha world. If what you eat ferments and turns sour, you belch gas and eruc tate undigested food or water; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated, remember the moment "Papes Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost mar velous, and the joy is its harmless ness. A box of Pape's Diapepsin tab lets costs so little at drug stores, too. (Adv) . If si JKrli a pity she doesnt know Sesinol Soap would improve her complexion , Remarks like the above arc passed about many girls whose appearance wouid be most attractive were it not for a poor sl.in. R ESI. VOL SOAP is just wliat such girls need to help in overcoming their complexion difficulties, tt does more than re move dirt it gets right after tlifse . closed pores, and excessive oil iness. and it benefits the skin cells. When a little Kesinol Ointment i.i used in connection with Resinot Soap, relief is hastened, and un'cs. th;- trouble is due to some internal disv.dcr. the complexion is usually cleared in a short time. R ESI NO L SHAY ING STICK is very popular with men who IH.e the way the Rcsino! in soothes the face. ' Rcsinoi products at all druggists. her fingers and In her blue black hair. I had never seen these stones set to gether before, without diamonds to brighton them, but Miss Moreland's ! gems were so gorgeous and the settings ! were so unique, that they were Indeed ' stunning. Every other woman's jew- i els In the room looked conventional ! and ordinary by comparison. i I saw her surreptitiously call John's , attention to a magnificent dinner ring : with a 'large central sapphire sur-j rounded by emeralds and set in plati num. 'She secerned almost to draw it! front her finger. John shook his head, ! putting up his hand in negation. He! looked across at me quickly as though ; fearful I had seen the episode, but I j pretended to be engrossed in the gay foolishness of Karlton Shepard. "Are you sure," ho Said, "that Jack has never told you about me? Why, we hive been inspnrahle nil our lives- had the same. room nt college, are members of the samo fraternity, and ! now are deadly enemies in business. I ' belong to a rival advertising concern." j John's ears must have been acutely i turned In our direction, for he said: , "Well, I've put one over on you this time!" ' "Yon certainly did," answered Mr. i Pshepard, bowing In my direction. i "Oh, I didn't mean getting married, I More than $1,000,000 in county, state and federal funds will be expended on highway building in Klamath county during the next year. A. B. Cordlev. rtwin of the O. A. C. fschool of agriculture, is attending the annual meeting of the western agri cultural colleges and experiment sta tions at Ames, Iowa, Moved From my former place of busi ness to the corner of South 12th nml Mill Sts., in the big yellow building. Will lie permit neatly located and iu a better position to serve uiy customers. I have a nice lot of new and secondhand Furniture, Harness nnd a good solcctiou of standard Hangcs. My stock Is nice and clean, with rensonubie prices. If you liave anything to offw or exchange, H. M. Cannon FlIOXE 86 305 South 12th St. Special Demonstration of Jewel and Bridge-Beach Ranges Every afternoon from 2 p. m. to 5 p. m., November 17 to 22. Drop in and enjoy a good cup of coffee or tea with hot biscuit and cake. None Better than Bridge & Beach Superior Stoves and Ranges Come in and enjoy a cup of hot coffee or tea and biscuit. ' u Superior The Jewel Wood or Coal and Gas Ranges Bake Better You place yourself under no obligation. Wm. Gahlsdorf THE STORE OF HOUSEWARES 133 N. Liberty Street Phone 67